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Word: deeps (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...three other floors. The roof will be flat, thus available for experiments requiring open air. High ceilings and perfect lighting conditions will be features of the basement proper, which are possible by having all but four feet above the ground. Its walls are of gray granite and the deep pit is constructed of solid concrete. All three upper stories will be made of dull Harvard brick. The latest improvements in ventilation will be installed and it will be heated by the central plant in the Peabody Museum. With the exception of the sub-basement, the building will be divided into...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WOLCOTT GIBBS MEMORIAL | 3/16/1912 | See Source »

...General Electric Company Club of Lynn on Soldiers Field last Saturday afternoon. Each team scored two goals, and the teams were as evenly matched as the result indicates. The University team played the harder rushing game, although the Lynn men were better individually. The condition of the field, ankle-deep with mud, retarded the play to a great extent, and this, coupled with the absence of Captain Byng, Barron and Francke from the game was a distinct handicap...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SOCCER TEAM IN THE GAME | 3/11/1912 | See Source »

...author of "The Siamese Cat", "Beached Keels", and other justly admired tales, took his bachelor's degree magna cum laude. Of the three most successful and most distinguished Harvard playwrights, Knoblauch, of '96, although he won no scholastic distinction, was well known to all who knew him as a deep and thorough student of the drama. Edward Sheldon, of 1908, took his degree magna cum laude, and is in the Phi Beta Kappa. William Vaughn Moody, '93, author of "The Great Divide", which has many claims to be the best play ever written in America, took his degree magna...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PROF. COPELAND'S SERMON | 2/29/1912 | See Source »

...relentlessly, comes the calm, certain figure of a Jewish doctor, invincible because he possesses what those tortured spirits round him lack,--faith. Through the sheer force which it gives him, he instills it into them, and reconciles them. Another teaching is prominent: that true faith is something so deep and so compelling that it can be confined to no one sect or race. He who goes to this play with an unreasoning and instinctive aversion to a Jew, will find much material for sober reflection. "As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he," be he Jew or Gentile...

Author: By D. N. T., | Title: New Plays in Boston | 2/27/1912 | See Source »

Princeton attack continued to keep play about the goal. Then the University forwards braced and after carrying the puck down the rink once or twice scored for the first time on a long shot by Huntington. Five minutes later Sortwell repeated with a wonderful shot from the boards in deep wing, and the half ended...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD, 3; PRINCETON, 2 | 1/11/1912 | See Source »

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